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Verbatim
Published around 30 BCE, the second book of Satires is a series of poems composed in dactylic hexameter by the Roman poet Horace.
In a humorous dialogue between Ulysses and Tiresias, he exposes those arts which the fortune hunters make use of, in order to be appointed the heirs of rich ...
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Horace's Satire 2.5 is a dialogue between Tiresias and Ulysses, rep- resented as a continuation of their interview in Book 11 of the Odyssey. Ulysses inquires ...
by Horace. " Besides the things that you have told, Tiresias, let me be so bold, As your opinion to demand. How I the loss of house and land
“Horace Satires 2.5: Restrained Indignation.” AJPh 105 (1984): 426-33. Rudd, N. The Satires of Horace. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1966. Stanford ...
Horace Satires 2.5: Restrained Indignation · M. Roberts · Published 1984 · Philosophy · American Journal of Philology.
Dec 28, 2018 · In Satires 2.5, Horace introduces Ulysses and Tiresias in order not only to throw light on this corruption of patronage but also to address his ...
ABSTRACT: The aim of this article is to indicate the way through which the satirical persona of Horace uses the model of the epic Homeric hero in the frame ...
Jan 19, 2023 · In Satires 2.5. Horace parodies the Roman version of this vice, known as captatio or 'legacy- hunting'; with baroque imagination, he presents ...
There is an acknowledged ambiguity and double meaning in his expression, under which, perhaps, the poet disguises his own sentiments of the skill of these ...